4

Let's say I'm building a web application whose user pages can be found at http://example.com/NAME. What's the best way to make sure the username doesn't conflict with a reserved word (e.g. 'about', 'contact', etc.)? I can think of two ways:

  • Maintain a list somewhere in my code. This is great and all, but means I have another piece of code I have to edit if I decide to, say, change the "about" page to "aboutus".
  • Request the URI (e.g. http://example.com/someusername) and check if it exists (doesn't return a 404). This feels kind of like a hack, but on the other hand it does exactly what it's supposed to do. On the other hand, I can't reserve anything without making a page for it.

What would be the best way to go about this? Manual validation of usernames is not an option. Thanks!

EDIT: I forgot to mention, the username has to go at the root, like this:

http://example.com/USERNAME

Not like this:

http://example.com/users/USERNAME

Hence why I'm asking this question. This is for technical reasons, don't ask.

2
  • Is it possible to make have the user page URL be example.com/users/NAME? Would that address your issue?
    – Sean
    Jun 3, 2009 at 8:42
  • No, I have to have it stem off the root for technical reasons. Jun 3, 2009 at 8:43

9 Answers 9

4

I would strongly suggest using a unique path like http://example.com/users/NAME instead. Otherwise, what are you going to do if you want to add a reserved word, but a user has already taken it as their user name? You'll end up with all kinds of potential migration problems down the track.

Alternatively, if you must have something that goes straight off http://example.com/, could you possibly prefix all user names? So that user jerryjvl would translate to link http://example.com/user_jerryjvl?

If there is really no other possible solution, then I'd say either check user names against whatever data source determines what the 'reserved words' are, or make a lookup file / table / structure somewhere that contains all the reserved words.

3

In the interest of completeness, if you can't change the routing. Another possibility is to have your user routes and your non-user routes have a programmatic distinction. For example, if you appended a '_' to the end of each of your user routes, then you can make sure that users are located at: http://example.com/NAME_ and the other route would never end in '_'

3
  • Aha! Good idea, that's exactly what I need. It's a hack, but I have to expect that with the conditions I'm working with. Thanks! Jun 3, 2009 at 8:51
  • 11
    There's an existing convention from Unix, prefix ~.
    – MSalters
    Jun 3, 2009 at 8:59
  • @MSalters: Oh yeah, I've seen that before. I'll use that then. Jun 3, 2009 at 19:20
2

How about changing your routing scheme so that users are at example.com/users/NAME ?

2

I maintain the reserved words inside the code. This is the PERL code that I use in the http://postbit.com/ website to check if the usernamename is a reserved word:

# Black list of logins and sub-domains reserved keywords
my @black_list = qw(
  about access account accounts add address adm admin administration
  adult advertising affiliate affiliates ajax analytics android anon
  anonymous api app apps archive atom auth authentication
  ...
);

my $username_normalized = lc($username);
   $username_normalized =~ s/\W//gs; # 'log-in' -> 'login'

for my $this_username (@black_list) {
  if ($username_normalized eq $this_username) {
    die("This username is already taken. Please choose other username.\n");
  }
}

The complete list of reserved names (like 'css', 'images', 'js', 'admin', 'root', 'old', 'test', 'www', 'admin', 'login', 'devel'...) with more than 300 login usernames is posted here:

http://blog.postbit.com/reserved-username-list.html

1

You only know what are these 'reserved' words. So better maintain a list and validate against it.

Another method will be if you use a CMS, then all these keywods 'about', 'contact' etc. will be there in your database. Validate against it.

1

Right next to the text box something like: "Please use your personal nickname or you real name. Usernames with common words indicating affiliation with the site administration may be revoked".

1
  • 1
    Ah, yes, that will surely make the users think "I shouldn't use this name" if they want to use a "bad" name. Or, no, it won't. Jun 3, 2009 at 9:02
1

How about just create dummy accounts first with all the reserve words? just list all the possible ones and create them.

if you use

www.example.com/user/name 

then there will be no problem but it seems like you'd like the URL to be short.

1

Maintain a list somewhere in my code. This is great and all, but means I have another piece of code I have to edit if I decide to, say, change the "about" page to "aboutus".

Your menus should be stored in an array/list. This way you would have only 1 piece of code to edit, not 2. =]

Then, since all menus are in one array, you can match username with elements in the array. for example

$menu = array('About', 'Contact', 'Home')
if( in_array($username, $menu) ) {
  echo 'invalid username'
}
0

You could always look and see how stackoverflow.com works.

2
  • That would be "Using a URI scheme that doesn't match the one the question is about"
    – Quentin
    Jun 3, 2009 at 8:52
  • It seems I answered before the question was fully asked.
    – quamrana
    Jun 4, 2009 at 13:53

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